| LTVNET on Mon, 23 Jul 2001 23:18:53 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime> Re: [rumori] Public Enemy Goes Open Source |
[To:s and CC:s as in prior message in this thread--mod]
To whom it may concern:
I apologize if I mislead anyone with my recent
MusicDish article about Public Enemy.
Our target audience is substantially new media
professionals. When I placed quotations around the
phrase "open source", I assumed most of our readers
would understand that I was being "tongue in cheek"
and not literal.
Either way, I take responsibility if this caused any
misunderstanding. I will forward your info to my
superiors. We will publish a clarification if
necessary.
Thanks,
Chas - MusicDish
--- "R. John Heck" <heck@volny.cz> wrote:
> Thank you for invitation, I had to click in
> agreement to their terms to hear.
>
> The writer of the article got it wrong. To call a
> song contest
> promotion 'open source' is to stretch an overused
> phrase out of
> proportion of its established meaning. The free use
> of an open source
> work is granted provided any works based upon it are
> also open
> source. Public Enemy's project is simply the making
> of another Public
> Enemy album, with PE apparently taking ownership of
> the derived
> works. To call this project 'Open Source' belies
> both a complete
> misunderstanding of the practice, as well as lazy
> journalism
> signalled by an overeagerness to pepper the text
> with trendy
> buzzwords. The one responsible for the misleading
> invitation is the
> writer of the article: ltvnet@musicdish.com.
>
> In PE's defence, neither they nor their site
> SlamJamz.com use the
> phrase 'open source' in their texts concerning the
> project. Mr.
> ltvnet should know better, as he's close to the
> business, that the
> kind of contracts provided to music entities,
> entertainers, and media
> personnel don't allow the freedom to give away the
> goods.
>
> Open source is like a truly public library filled
> with public domain
> materials, where you are granted the key to the
> stacks for the simple
> fact that you live in the community. The result of
> so many young
> persons having access to such a powerful institution
> through their
> formative years forms the hope that someday one of
> them may make a
> mature contribution to those stacks, to the benefit
> of all.
>
> Public Enemy has made significant contributions to
> music, and we mean
> them no disrespect, but their output has been locked
> up by and
> shelved behind a cash register down the street.
> Their current project
> exploits their fanbase, many of whom are no doubt
> eager to appear on
> a PE release, regardless of the legal requirements.
> The Tape-beatles
> see the offering of $1000 as a kind of insult; why
> not simply ask the
> public to collaborate without the collusion of
> lucre?
>
> The Tape-beatles and Public Works Productions
> http://pwp.detritus.net
>
>
> >http://www.musicdish.com/mag/?id=4175
> >
> >Public Enemy Goes 'Open Source'?
> >By: LTVNET (Associate Writer)
> >2001-07-16
> >Now THIS could be an answer to the so-called
> file-sharing dilemma.
> >Put the file-sharing public to WORK!
> >Public Enemy of "Fight the Power" fame is producing
> their next CD
> >with an "open source" twist. If you wanna get
> involved, you better
> >get hoppin'. After September 14, 2001, your "big
> opportunity" is
> >gone.
> >Each week, download a newly recorded a cappella
> vocal track from
> >Public Enemy. Produce some music tracks around the
> vocals and upload
> >your unique version back to them. Winners get
> $1,000 per song plus
> >an album credit. How 'bout that?
> >They're stressing innovation and quality. Go Techno
> or even Country
> >if it works.
> >This collection will fall under Public Enemy's own
> record label
> >SlamJamz.com, as they move aggressively to retain
> more creative and
> >marketing control of their products. PE is also
> partnering with
> >House of Blues Digital for a DVD of Public Enemy
> live in concert.
> >Both products are scheduled for release this year.
> >Chuck D of Public Enemy is notorious for his
> "pro-Napster/anti-major
> >label" views. In 1999, they released an MP3 version
> of their CD
> >"There's A Poison Goin' On," before the release of
> the actual CD.
> >This ruffled the fathers of many traditional retail
> outlets who
> >initially responded by refusing to carry PE's CD in
> their stores.
> >For details on the contest, go to SlamJamz.com.
>
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